Showing posts with label coincidence. Show all posts
Showing posts with label coincidence. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 24, 2025

fish for all!

 
Kiva sent me an email this morning: I had money to lend again!
Best of all, there was enough in that account to even cover the lending fee, so Kiva wouldn't have to do so.
Perfect!
That meant I had a question to answer: who would I choose?
Well, as it turned out, that wasn't such a hard choice after all.
I knew I would be dining on seafood tonight, thanks to Smitty, my brother.
 
When I read that Marie of Sierra Leone was requesting a loan to purchase more fish to sell, I knew that was the right one for me!
Right place, right time.
That makes the twelfth open loan that I have on Kiva right now.
All of the other 145 loans I've made over the years have been repaid, so those are all regarded as closed.
The mother of four is still needed a few more backers to fund her loan.
I made sure to post a few words of support on her wall.
Hope that encourages others to help her.
(smile!

Sunday, May 4, 2025

may the 4th be with ...community service

This was definitely something different for me.

I'd grabbed a few of the flyers about "Congregations In Service" after the SING concert, intending to read them and possibly attend.

I realized quickly, though, that the activity to be held at Asbury Memorial Church would not be the one for me.

I'm retired and don't do early mornings!

However, the one at Baha'i Unity Center wasn't to start until noon30 - I could most def be there for that!

So, there is where I was today, for the 33rd community service event they have held since the project first began in 2004.

I know, the math sounds wonky, but it isn't.

Baha'i usually holds two per year, in spring and fall, but not for the first few years and not during the pandemic.

I'm glad I was there as part of my bday67 celebration.

Betty taught me how to make no-sew blankets, and I did so in the company of several folks older than myself: Betty; Ray, the Vietman veteran; Connie, the 81-yo lover of butterfly pins; Dee, of India; and two others across the table from me.

That was actually very nice to be with older people.

I also loved that the blankets were were making would be given to children.

These were smaller blankets that usual, and they were brightly colored or had fun designs on the soft fabric, like these hedgehogs that I thought were opossums.

I only got two blankets completed, but that's two more than there would have been.

Right place, right time.

i thank You, God.

Wednesday, August 28, 2024

coffee, chatting, and jewelry, too


The next time in Puerto Rico, I'll have to look up The Coffee Boutique.
I was hoping to find something woman-empowering on kiva that both Barbara and Christa might enjoy, and there it was!
Right place, right time.
Zorey found herself jobless when the pandemic struck, so she turned her hobby of jewelry-making into ZK Jewelry & More.
Now, she's ready for a new adventure... and that word is how she hooked me!
 

As a coincidence, mi amiga Sandy is also making jewelry and had her first sales show almost a month ago.
I wouldn't be at all surprised if she has another this busy Labor Day weekend!
(smile!)
And Carolyn, how would she feel about such a enterprise?
Oh, please, she wears more jewelry than all of us combined, and would love an excuse to hang out and talk about it!
(smile!)
Sure, we'd have to cruise down to Puerto Rico to do so... but that's fine.
We all enjoy a good shipboard adventure, and we wouldn't even need passports there. (smile!)
Plus, there was already another Nerdfighter chipping.
I've even posted the link on fb, in hopes others will follow my lead and bring this dream to life for Zorey and others... like me and mi amigas.
(smile!)
Yes, definitely where I was meant to be on Kiva.

Tuesday, August 30, 2022

off to a new home, with gratitude


During the past few years, I've been giving away or selling furniture and other large items in the house.
Before my nephew and his two girls moved in, I'd cleared out two rooms of unwanted or unused goods, making room for them.
No more such furniture was around... save for one item with sentimental attachments: Mama's sewing machine.
I kept telling myself that I was going to use it.
I really did.
But, I never sewed the first stitch with it.
I had put the machine in place, at one point, and had even threaded it.
I had thought that if I had it up and ready for action, I'd go for it.
Nope, never happened.
It became a mere desk, a surface upon which to put stuff.
I had asked around, trying to interest my first niece or her mom, but to no avail.
All those theatre groups I know?
Some of those costumes are designed and sewed for specific shows.
Certainly they had a seamstress that would make use of this fine machine?
No, they appreciated my offer, but they already had sewing machines.
Fine.
I would just keep it until something came up...
and, yesterday, something did.
The church has adopted an Afghani refugee family in the "First Friends" program.
In the September newsletter was a list of items the Abasy family needed.
And there, midway down the list, was "sewing machine".
Right place, right time.
I had contacted Asbury Memorial's Assistant Minister, Claire Marich, to say that I had that very item and would need help moving it.
She and her husband just left with the sewing machine.
Mrs. Abasy will be able to make her curtains now, as well as clothes for her family.
I know Mama would approve.
As for me, I'm going to miss its presence...
but I'm grateful that it will no longer be idle.

Sunday, October 14, 2012

muralcle block party!

I was asked to promote this event, so here we go. Please note that all of the following italicized words were written by the folks at SeeSAW. I have added my photographs in lieu of using theirs.

For Immediate Release
SeeSAW Block Party and David Ellis
Who: SeeSAW (Savannah Art Walls) and Savannah artists Katherine Sandoz, Troy Wandzel, Adolfo Alvarado and visiting artist David Ellis
What: Block Party
Where: SeeSAW Mural Wall | 34th and Habersham Street | Savannah, GA
When: Sunday, October 14 , 3:30 PM - 5:30 PM
Social Media Feed: Twitter @SavArtWAlls
Follow SeeSAW’s collaboration with David Ellis with the hashtag #EllisSAV on twitter and instagram October 14 - 19.
For info please email info@savannahartwalls.org

SeeSAW (See Savannah Art Walls) is excited to announce a block party this Sunday, October 14 in celebration of a year’s worth of art and community support at the mural wall at 34th and Habersham Street in Savannah, GA. In December of 2011 SeeSAW secured approval from Savannah’s Metropolitan Planning Commission to oversee the first designated rotating mural wall in Savannah. To fund a years worth of murals SeeSAW successfully raised over $7,000.00 on the crowd-sourcing website Kickstarter. Most of the money raised was locally sourced from individual Savannahians and local businesses that support the amplification of public art.
In order to stay in line with the curatorial standard of creating work that is Savannah-centric in nature, SeeSAW selected prominent local artists Katherine Sandoz, Troy Wandzel, and Adolfo Hernandez Alvarado. These three artists were selected to tell a visual story of Savannah because of their consistent history documenting and interacting with the diverse people and geography of Georgia's first city.

Starting on the coldest day of the year in February 2012, Katherine Sandoz painted an abstract landscape of Turtle Island, a hammock off the Georgia coast directly due east from the wall at 34th and Habersham. The landscape spanned the length of the 8 ft x 100 ft wall.

In June 2012, rather than obliterate Sandoz’s landscape, Troy Wandzel decided to add a field of flowers along the lower third of the wall. Often in contorted positions, Wandzel painted over 70 portraits from life of everyday Savannah citizens that willingly suffered the June heat with smiles on their faces.

Staying in the theme of adding
to the wall rather than starting
over, in September of 2012
Adolfo Hernandez Alvarado synthesized Sandoz’s landscape and Wandzel’s portraits by painting a centrally located female figure with a crown formed out of seashells and waves. The woman represents
the feminine qualities of Savannah as a city, from its natural and architectural beauty to its motherly embrace.
“La Madre” of Savannah is flanked by two bearded horn players derivative of the fountain in historic Forsyth Park.
To close out the year with a bang, SeeSAW will be bringing in world-renowned NYC-based artist David Ellis for a week of painting “large, mobile, 3D” objects placed on the lawn in front of the wall on 34th Street. SeeSAW co-founders James “DrZ” Zdaniewski and Matt Hebermehl were inspired to create SeeSAW based upon previous experiences assisting Mr. Ellis on projects in Savannah and the Wynwood Walls neighborhood of Miami, FL. David Ellis will be in Savannah October 14 - 19.


Let me tell you, this was quite a block party, too! People from the neighborhood, people from all over Savannah, even people from other cities, all came together to admire the Muralcle and to watch the New Yorker create his motion-based paintings on the side panels of cargo trucks. It was almost like he was dancing! He may well have been, as the crowd was entertained by the sounds of Vinyl Appreciation while slurping Italian ices to stay cool in the sunshine.
Remember how Fliss had her portrait painted in June by Troy Wandzel? Well, the evidence points to his having an influence on Adolfo Alvarado's design. Perhaps he asked that my visage be preserved; perhaps he did not. Whatever the case may be, Fliss remains with "La Madre", peeking out on the lefthand side. Is it mere coincidence that has me nestled near "The Mother"? I prefer to think it was on purpose. Yet another message from beyond, reassuring me that I am spending the money properly.
Thanks, Mama.